Gallup is best known for keeping tabs on American presidential elections, but since 2005 it has been quietly accumulating data on how women around the world evaluate their lives. Are they hopeful and happy? Are they struggling and stressed? Are there differences in how men and women evaluate their lives?

Gallup is best known for keeping tabs on American presidential elections, but since 2005 it has been quietly accumulating data on how women around the world evaluate their lives. Are they hopeful and happy? Are they struggling and stressed? Are there differences in how men and women evaluate their lives?

To answer these questions, Gallup had men and women rate their lives on questions ranging from how much physical pain they experience to how hopeful they were about the future and what their financial prospects are.

Respondents were then classified as thriving, struggling or suffering based on their scores. A zero represents the worst possible life and 10 the best. Respondents who rated their lives as a seven or better were classified as thriving. Respondents who rated their lives four or lower were said to be suffering. Those who fall between, according to Gallup's metric, were said to be struggling.

In a somewhat unexpected outcome, Gallup pollsters found that despite the fact that women face inequality in the areas of employment, personal safety and physical well-being, they rate their lives similarly to men. Across 147 countries, 24 percent of men and women rated their lives well enough to be considered "thriving." Women and men were also as likely to be "struggling" (63 percent) and "suffering" (13 percent).

Of course not all countries fit into this model, and the results in some cases are surprising.

Where women are happier

Women were more likely to say they were thriving in Qatar, Angola, South Korea and Iran. In attempting to explain these findings, Lymari Morales, managing editor at Gallup, said that there are no simple answers. One thing Gallup does know, however, is that "thriving appears to be highly correlated with employment and GDP," Morales said.

Gallup found that 55 percent of South Korean women considered their lives to be thriving compared to just 44 percent of men. Morales believes these responses reflect Korean women's high rates of participation in the paid labor force as well as their levels of educational attainment.

But life for women in Korea is far from perfect. For example, Korean women earn 38 percent less than men, the largest gender pay gap in the world. Morales suggests Korean women's responses to Gallup's surveys provide insights about how women evaluate their lives. "When they answer these questions, they aren't comparing themselves to men," she said, "they are just comparing themselves in general."

Another possibility is that women exhibit resilience and optimism despite the challenges they face. "Women in some countries may say their lives are a 10 because they have children, or a husband who helps with the family, or a roof over their head," Morales said, " and that doesn't always break down well when we look at it through a Western lens."

Media may also provide insight to women's responses in some of the countries. Morales said that recently in Egypt, GDP has been going up but thriving has been going down. Typically when GDP goes up, thriving goes up.

Explaining these results, Morales suggested that, "As access to media increased, Egyptians started comparing themselves to people in other countries. It could be that they are looking at all the progress in other countries, and it changes their expectations about how they should live," she said.

The insight about media may explain women's responses in Iran. While women there have high levels of educational attainment, they also have limited access to media because the government there heavily sensors newspapers, Internet and television.

Popular Comments

When a child is born, they are like a blank slate, only aware on things like, I
am hot, cold, wet, hungry, or Mommy hold me. Whatever they see the significant
others do becomes "normal" to them. The women, in this story view
happiness based
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9:56 a.m. Oct. 29, 2012

Top comment

BlueEyesFr

Paris, 00

i dont agree .......

Women are not properly treated either by
religions or by men ...

So maybe as a child, it does not show, except
in countries such as Iran or Afghanistan, but an adult and especially in
marriage or love
More..